Laying the Back Wall
Posted: Wed Jun 08, 2022 6:00 pm
On a recent YouTube video posted by the Casino Quest people in Vegas, local Texas player Troy (last name deleted) scored the second highest win in their 20 roll competition with a combination of Laying the Back Wall on the Come Out and sharpshooting point numbers once a point was established. The thing that dazzled the dealers at Casino Quest was the Lay the Back Wall strategy.
The way I learned that strategy was to lay $41 against the 4 and 10, $31 against the 5 and 9, and $25 against the 6 and 8. Total Lay bet was $194 across. Toss a 7 on the Come Out and you win $120 minus the $6 vig or a net $114. Troy's approach was to lay $30 against each number (Casino Quest did not take the vig up front) for a total $180 bet. If he tossed a 7 on the Come Out he would win $116. In this case, clearly the $30 lay on all of the numbers was a better bet. The shooter had $14 less action total for a potential $2 more net win. I say potential, because the numbers have to roll your way.
Either way, this is a pretty cool strategy in that the MOST you can lost if you don't toss a Seven is one bet. So you're risking, at most, $41 to win $114 - $116 total. And you have 6 ways to win versus 3, 4, or 5 ways to lose on any given number. Those aren't bad odds. Add to that the fact that if you DO knock yourself off one bet - you can always take sufficient odds on the pass line once the point is established that you'll MAKE the point that you'll offset any initial setback and score a larger win by making your pass.
You also have additional opportunities to score offsetting wins by placing other numbers, scoring hits on them, and locking up those profits, regressing those bets as you go.
Overall, I think it's a decent play. What are your thoughts?
The way I learned that strategy was to lay $41 against the 4 and 10, $31 against the 5 and 9, and $25 against the 6 and 8. Total Lay bet was $194 across. Toss a 7 on the Come Out and you win $120 minus the $6 vig or a net $114. Troy's approach was to lay $30 against each number (Casino Quest did not take the vig up front) for a total $180 bet. If he tossed a 7 on the Come Out he would win $116. In this case, clearly the $30 lay on all of the numbers was a better bet. The shooter had $14 less action total for a potential $2 more net win. I say potential, because the numbers have to roll your way.
Either way, this is a pretty cool strategy in that the MOST you can lost if you don't toss a Seven is one bet. So you're risking, at most, $41 to win $114 - $116 total. And you have 6 ways to win versus 3, 4, or 5 ways to lose on any given number. Those aren't bad odds. Add to that the fact that if you DO knock yourself off one bet - you can always take sufficient odds on the pass line once the point is established that you'll MAKE the point that you'll offset any initial setback and score a larger win by making your pass.
You also have additional opportunities to score offsetting wins by placing other numbers, scoring hits on them, and locking up those profits, regressing those bets as you go.
Overall, I think it's a decent play. What are your thoughts?